On the night of Friday, an asteroid rushes by so close to the earth as it is rarely observed. However, NASA reassures: “2023 BU” is not on a collision course. And even if the celestial body entered the atmosphere, little would remain of it.
An asteroid passes exceptionally close to Earth on Friday night. The celestial body called “2023 BU” reached the closest point on its orbit early Friday at 1:27 a.m. German time, as the US space agency NASA announced. Then the asteroid, about the size of a delivery truck, rushes past the southern tip of South America at an altitude of only 3600 kilometers. According to NASA, there is no risk of an impact.
For comparison: Geostationary satellites are around 35,000 kilometers from Earth, the ISS space station around 400 kilometers. According to NASA, even if “2023 BU” were heading straight for Earth, it would largely burn up as a fireball when it entered the atmosphere, given its comparatively small diameter of 3.5 to 8.5 meters. In all likelihood, however, it will be one of the closest approaches to Earth that has ever been recorded, the statement said.
The amateur astronomer Gennady Borissow discovered the celestial body at the Margo Observatory in Crimea a few days ago. Borisov made a name for himself in 2019 when he used a home-made telescope to discover a comet crossing our solar system on its journey from deep space. Comet 2I/Borisov attracted worldwide interest among astronomers at the time, who confirmed its observations.
International observatories also immediately targeted Borisov’s most recent discovery in order to determine the orbit of “2023 BU” and thus possible risks for the earth. A threat from the asteroid could then be quickly ruled out, as NASA scientist Davide Farnocchia explained.
Researchers have identified around 27,000 asteroids near Earth, of which around 10,000 are more than 140 meters in diameter. None are known to be able to crash directly into our planet in the foreseeable future. Last October, NASA succeeded for the first time in changing the direction of movement of an asteroid through the impact of a probe. The background to the experiment is the question of how the earth could be protected from approaching celestial bodies. An asteroid impact around 66 million years ago is the leading theory among scientists as to why the dinosaurs became extinct.